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A man looks on the market's movement at
a stock exchange in Shenyang, capital of northeast China's Liaoning
Province, Oct. 10, 2008. Chinese shares continued to plummet for the sixth
consecutive day on Friday. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index shed
3.57 percent to end at 2,000.57 points. The Shenzhen Component Index
closed at 6,385.35 points, down 5.52 percent. (Xinhua/Li
Gang) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Oct. 10 (Xinhua) -- Chinese shares continued to plummet for the
sixth consecutive day on Friday, dampened by weak market confidence amid the
global turmoil.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index shed 3.57
percent to end at 2,000.57 points. The smaller Shenzhen Component Index closed
at6,385.35 points, down 5.52 percent. The two bourses lost 12 percent this week.
China's securities regulator on Thursday said
publicly-traded companies must pay dividends in cash rather than stock over
three years before submitting their refinancing applications. The move was to
encourage long-term investment and reduce market volatility.
The measure was unveiled one day after the central
bank announced cuts in both the interest rate and reserve-requirement ratio in
an effort to boost the domestic economy amid worries overthe global financial
crisis.
But confidence remained weak despite the government's
recent measures to boost the market. Such confidence couldn't be restored
overnight and would take time for the policies to take effect, said Hu Lifeng, a
Yinhe Securities analyst.
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A man looks on the market's movement at
a stock exchange in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 10, 2008.
) Photo
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China's entrepreneur confidence index, a gauge of the
understanding, views and projections of business people, plunged to 123.8 points
in the third quarter. That was down 11 points fromthe previous quarter, and down
19.2 percent from the same period last year, the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS) said on Friday.
Stock turmoil swept the regional markets as Tokyo
dived 9.62 percent, Hong Kong slipped 8.04 percent and Singapore 6.42 percent.
Thailand shares slumped more than 8 percent, and trading in the Indonesia bourse
was suspended indefinitely.
China Life slipped 3.88 percent to 19.82 yuan (2.86
U.S. dollars), and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China edged down 1.48
percent to 4 yuan. Bank of Beijing rose 3.39 percent to 7.62 yuan.
Sinopec, Asia's biggest refiner, fell 3.38 percent to
9.80 yuan, although it announced on Friday it would not cash in any of the 4.335
billion of its non-tradable shares that had been freed-up.
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A man looks on the market's movement at
a stock exchange in Lanzhou, capital of northwest China's Gansu Province,
Oct. 10, 2008. ) Photo
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Pharmaceutical shares rose in general as it was
widely expected the on-going third plenary session of the 17th Central Committee
of the Communist Party of China (CPC) would announce new policies to boost the
medical and the pharmaceutical sectors. Jiuzhitang, a leading pharmaceutical
company rose 6 percent.
Vice Premier Wang Qishan said on Thursday the country
was fully confident and capable of overcoming the current economic difficulties,
vowing to work closely with other countries to safeguard stability of the global
financial market.
Wang, in his meeting with former German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder, said China had already taken relevant measures to face up to
the turbulence of the international financial market. As thelargest developing
country and a rising market, its priority was to well handle its own problems.